Raj,

Which ColdFire are you using?
Which serial interface are you seeing this with (UART/SPI/I2C/..)?

Michael


On 11/05/2013 07:40 AM, Raju B wrote:
whenever i am trying to receive data from serial communication continuously in 
uClinux, I am getting every 10th byte is overwrite by 11 byte and so on....

 Iam using freescale coldfire processor. Could you any body please help me to 
resolve this issue.

Thanks & Regards,
Raj


On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 10:16 PM, Lennart Sorensen <lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca 
<mailto:lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca>> wrote:

    On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 11:28:52AM -0400, Bair, Richard wrote:
    > I have a 4.7MB application that runs on the 2.6.26 kernel (Freescale BSP) 
and am working to make it run on the 2.6.38 kernel released in the ColdFire BSP in 
Feb 2012.  I'm concerned about memory allocation as my first attempt to run on the 
38 kernel appears to be using 2^n memory allocation vs. allocation that sizes just 
1-page over the application.
    >
    > 1) Can anyone tell me the exact kernel config name that needs to be 
adjusted for the 38 kernel to set the default memory allocation?
    >       - Older posts indicate modules like page_alloc2 or Kmalloc2 control 
this so I'm going to investigate these in more detail
    >       - RTFMing indicate that this might be the area but I don't see it 
in the 38 version (LTIB or make menucionfig):
    >               menuconfig -> kernel settings -> general settings, try enabling either the 
"Permit large allocations" setting, or the "non-power-of-2"
    >
    > 2) Historically, we use LTIB to create the kernel.  Does LTIB expose 
most/all settings of the 2.6.38 kernel?  Can it be out of sync with the make 
menuconfig uClinus kernel?

    Maybe this changed the behaviour you see:

    commit fc4d5c292b68ef02514d2072dcbf82d090c34875
    Author: David Howells <dhowe...@redhat.com <mailto:dhowe...@redhat.com>>
    Date:   Wed May 6 16:03:05 2009 -0700

        nommu: make the initial mmap allocation excess behaviour Kconfig 
configurable

        NOMMU mmap() has an option controlled by a sysctl variable that 
determines
        whether the allocations made by do_mmap_private() should have the excess
        space trimmed off and returned to the allocator.  Make the initial 
setting
        of this variable a Kconfig configuration option.

        The reason there can be excess space is that the allocator only 
allocates
        in power-of-2 size chunks, but mmap()'s can be made in sizes that 
aren't a
        power of 2.

        There are two alternatives:

         (1) Keep the excess as dead space.  The dead space then remains unused 
for the
             lifetime of the mapping.  Mappings of shared objects such as libc, 
ld.so
             or busybox's text segment may retain their dead space forever.

         (2) Return the excess to the allocator.  This means that the dead 
space is
             limited to less than a page per mapping, but it means that for a 
transient
             process, there's more chance of fragmentation as the excess space 
may be
             reused fairly quickly.

        During the boot process, a lot of transient processes are created, and
        this can cause a lot of fragmentation as the pagecache and various slabs
        grow greatly during this time.

        By turning off the trimming of excess space during boot and disabling
        batching of frees, Coldfire can manage to boot.

        A better way of doing things might be to have /sbin/init turn this 
option
        off.  By that point libc, ld.so and init - which are all long-duration
        processes - have all been loaded and trimmed.

        Reported-by: Lanttor Guo <lanttor....@freescale.com 
<mailto:lanttor....@freescale.com>>
        Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowe...@redhat.com 
<mailto:dhowe...@redhat.com>>
        Tested-by: Lanttor Guo <lanttor....@freescale.com 
<mailto:lanttor....@freescale.com>>
        Cc: Greg Ungerer <g...@snapgear.com <mailto:g...@snapgear.com>>
        Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <a...@linux-foundation.org 
<mailto:a...@linux-foundation.org>>
        Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torva...@linux-foundation.org 
<mailto:torva...@linux-foundation.org>>

    After all before this commit, trimming after allocating was always done.
    Now it is only done if you enable this CONFIG, or set the sysctl flag
    at runtime, which of course affects behaviour for all allocations after
    you change the setting.

    --
    Len Sorensen
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